This blog includes posts on lead generation, eMarketing, Web Marketing, SEO and other leading edge marketing techniques.
-Alan Blume
Welcome to my Virtual Marketing, Lead Generation and SEO Blog!This blog includes posts on lead generation, eMarketing, Web Marketing, SEO and other leading edge marketing techniques. -Alan Blume |
Posted on November 21st, 2011 by Alan Blume
Here is a list of 12 important things to consider for your Insurance Agency Marketing New Year Resolutions.

Insurance Agency Marketing New Year Resolutions
And you have determined how to increase your book of business with a clear and concise insurance agency marketing plan for the New Year.
For more information visit: Insurance Agency Web Marketing
Posted on November 14th, 2011 by Alan Blume
Last week I achieved one of my goals for 2011, with a little time to spare, as I published my 100th B2B marketing article in Ezine, a leading online article publisher. My most viewed article is: Should You Hire an Insurance Agency Producer Without an Insurance Agency Marketing Program. I’ve written 38 insurance agency marketing articles. The additional 62 articles predominately relate to B2B Business Marketing, Internet Business and Business Book Reviews, topics germane to StartUpSelling’s subsidiary, StartMarketingTech, which focuses on B2B Web Marketing for technology and professional service organizations.

B2B Web Marketing
With over 18,000 Marketing Article Views, we are very pleased with the exposure and SEO relevance provided by Ezine. Ezine requires authors to conform to multiple pages of standards and guidelines, beyond their requirement for original content, including grammar, keyword density, punctuation, article length and structure. Platinum level authors (a level achieved about 6 months ago) have demonstrated the ability to submit high quality articles while ensuring the content meets Ezine’s strict editorial guidelines.StartUpSelling, an insurance agency marketing agency, focuses on a full-service approach to insurance agency and broker marketing, and publishes blogs and articles on behalf of itself and many clients. StartUpSelling specializes in all fields of insurance agency marketing, including Insurance Search Engine Marketing & Insurance Agency SEO, Insurance Agency eMarketing, Agency Telemarketing and Social Media Marketing.
StartMarketingTech offers the same services for B2B companies including technology firms, software companies and professional services organizations. Blume is also the author of Your Virtual Success, published last summer and a soon to be released book called Sell More & Work Less, (another 2011 goal) which is expected to be available in December. Visit Alan Blume’s expert author page on Ezine, which inclues 100 B2B Marketing and Insurance Agency Marketing articles. Or go to one of our blogs at: http://www.startupselling.com.
Posted on October 28th, 2011 by Alan Blume
White Hat SEO versus Black Hat SEO Definitions
Hopefully your insurance agency is now familiar with terms like insurance agency SEO, insurance agency search engine optimization or insurance agency search engine marketing, the process in which agents attempt to lift their websites to a top position on page one of Google or Bing’s search engine results pages (SERP). There are two basic approaches to accomplish improved search engine rankings, which can ironically (or iconically) be found in old Westerns. I’m referring to the old white hat versus black hat cowboy days featuring white hat actors like John Wayne and Clayton Moore (The Lone Ranger) against black hat actors like Jack Palance. For a more contemporary version, Luke Skywalker versus Darth Vader comes to mind, minus the hat for Luke. Fast forward to today and we’re now referring to white hat versus black hat SEO tactics. Hopefully your agency is not engaging in black hat tactics accidentally or otherwise. As with the movies of yesteryear, the black hat represents the villain, and the villain is usually vilified. Black hat SEO tactics can get your agency in trouble with the search engines, and there is no need to resort to these methods to achieve compelling SEO results for your agency.
Long Tail Keywords and White Hat Keyword Density
Insurance Agency Search Engine Optimization begins by creating a list of preferred insurance keyword phrases, often referred to as trophy words. Examples of this may include: California Liability Insurance, Massachusetts Business Insurance, New York Truck Insurance or Group Health Insurance. These phrases are called long tail keywords and need to appear on insurance agency websites in a variety of ways. Once your agency has determined the best keyword phrases (after reviewing them in Google AdWords or other keyword analytics tool), your agency should populate your website using your preferred keywords. This needs to be accomplished with your metadata (description, meta keywords, page title, etc.) and on the actual content which appears on your web page. Your agency should also measure “on page” keyword density. Each page should be optimized for one to three phrases. Experts and empirical data varies on this, but many consider 5% to 6% to be optimum density for the major search engines. Working within the boundaries of “reasonable” keyword density, meta best practices, quality inbound links to your insurance agency website and a robust social media marketing initiative will yield positive results for your insurance agency SEO web marketing plans.
Black Hat Methodologies, Link Building and Link Farms
This brings us to our first black hat alert. If your insurance agency web page were to continuously repeat your keyword phrase (Massachusetts Business Insurance for example) and were to do this 30 times in a 100 word page, your density would be abnormally high, and you would be keyword stuffing. The same would be true if you repeated Massachusetts Business Insurance five times in your meta description, or ten time in your alt image tags. Search engines can take note of this, resulting in the penalization or marginalization of that website page, which in turn will cause inferior rankings. Other black hat SEO approaches include Link Farms, Hidden Content and Gateway Pages. Let’s review each of these. Link farms are little more than a listing of companies and their website links. If you’re contacted by an organization that boasts they can provide “10,000 inbound links” to your website, you must carefully assess the type and quality of these links (and the company which is contacting you) to ensure there are no black hat tactics being employed. These days, Google and Bing are trending toward quality over quantity, and discount link farms in their complex ranking algorithms.
Hidden Content and Gateway Pages
Hidden content is another taboo, a good example of this is using both text and background that are the same color, allowing agencies to stuff “invisible keywords” on your website without taking up prime real estate. Search engines, however, are looking for this tactic, and if discovered, your website can again be penalized. Gateway pages should not be confused with legitimate landing pages. A landing page is appropriately optimized for your specific solution. For example, you can create a landing page for Professional Liability Insurance, featuring relevant content and appropriate keyword density exclusively for your PLI products and services. One could argue that Gateway Pages (sometimes referred to as Doorway Pages) originally had the same intent, but are now being abused by some companies, as they can be computer generated in the hundreds or even thousands. This refers back to the Link Farming or Link Building black hat tactic because the thousands of generated pages can include a “follow” link back to a designated website. This tactic was purportedly used by a major retailer over the last holiday season, which resulted in their website being removed by Google from Google Page One results.
Conclusion
Most agencies should leverage the old “crawl, walk, run” approach when it comes to search engine optimization, working first on relevant content with optimized meta, meta tags and keyword density, then supplementing these efforts with blogging, ePublishing, YouTube Videos and other Social Media Marketing campaigns. Make sure you or your marketing agency are not leveraging any black hat tactics and you will see your insurance agency SEO results consistently improve. And remember, no matter how pretty that big photo or image happens to be on your insurance agency website, these do nothing to help your SEO efforts. Make sure your website is balanced between graphical appeal and sufficient, relevant content.
Posted on October 6th, 2011 by Alan Blume
What is anchor text?
First, let’s start with a basic definition of anchor text. Simply stated, anchor text refers to the text that incorporates a link to another web page. Here is an HTML anchor text example:
<a href=”http://www.yourawesomeagencywebsite.com”> Awesome XYZ Agency</a>
The phrase “Awesome XYZ Agency” which would appear as a live link on a web page, is an example of anchor text and will result in an active link back to a specific website. In this example, the website is: “http://www.yourawesomeagencywebsite.com” (this is a fictitious website, and I certainly hope that nobody would use a website name that long).
Why should your insurance agency use anchor text?
1. Most SEO specialists believe that anchor text helps search engine rankings, improving your organic search Engine Results Pages (SERP). It can be very helpful to include your preferred keywords in your anchor text. For example, California Health Insurance or Michigan Construction Insurance.
2. Anchor text improves insurance agency website navigation. It offers enhanced internal and external linking helping your website visitors navigate to both internal pages and resources and external pages and resources (make sure you follow SEO best practices with SEO links, leveraging “No Follow” commands, etc.). The links might include phrases like: Commercial Insurance, Health Benefits, Insurance Quote, Click Here, etc.
You can also link to a specific resource. For example, your anchor text can highlight a specific PDF, client testimonial or video. Anchor text can help direct website visitors to your most current and best content. Think of these links as prominent road signs, pointing you in a certain direction, such as: “Anaheim Next Exit”, “Exit 40 Food And Lodging”, “Take Exit 5 To Route 93″, etc. Anchors point web visitors in a direction they (or you) might wish to travel.
3. These links make your insurance agency website more professional looking. Not only can the links help with navigation, they can make your site look more dynamic, interesting and content rich. For example, it’s great to include multiple anchor links to your blog(s), insurance resources, article directory, newsletters and white papers. For example, let’s say that a web visitor, a group benefits prospect, is visiting your insurance agency website healthcare page. Anchors allow web visitors to easily find your Group Benefits Newsletter, or to fill out a web form for a new compliance update which can greatly enhance their web experience.
Implementation
Insurance agency websites should leverage anchor text strategies to improve navigation, SEO and highlight preferred content. How do implement these types of changes? These are basic HTML changes which almost any website should be able to accommodate. HTML coding changes are simple for any website developer, competent insurance marketing agency, or if your agency is using a content management front end (Drupal, Adobe, etc.) these types of changes can often be done by your own relatively non-technical resources. WordPress and Template sites often allow these changes, though some insurance agency template based websites are extremely simple and limit changes of this type. My recommendation is to review anchor link opportunities on each key page of your insurance website, and quickly implement. This presupposes your insurance agency website is up to date and currently includes clear calls to action for each applicable page. That should be first on your agenda, before you tackle the important insurance web marketing plan discussed in this article.
For more information go to: http://www.startupselling.com/insurance-agency-seo.html.
Posted on July 5th, 2011 by Alan Blume
The ABC’s of Insurance Agency SEM And SEO
What’s the difference between Insurance Agency SEM and Insurance Agency SEO? Let’s start with a definition of each. SEM stands for Search Engine Marketing which is a type of Internet marketing which attempts to promote insurance agency websites by improving their visibility in search engine result pages (SERPs) through the use of, paid placement, contextual advertising, and paid inclusion. SEO stands for Search Engine Optimization, which incorporates the same goal of insurance agency SEM, improved agency website visibility in SERPs, but does so targeting organic (free) listings. Insurance agency SEO is a subset or component of SEM, and is often considered a requisite component of SEM initiatives. Acronyms abound for both initiatives. Here are some of the key elements of Insurance SEO, all of which will be found within a description of a more comprehensive Insurance Agency SEM program:
When we discuss SEM, we add pay for performance options including Insurance Agency PPC campaigns and ad words, article submissions, micro blogging, etc. Keyword analysis is performed for both SEO and SEM. Insurance Agency SEM requires constant care and consistent attention, it should be updated and monitored continually. Another aspect of SEM is Social Media Marketing (SMM) and Search Engine Marketing Management (SEMM). SEMM relates to many activities including SEO but focuses on ROI management instead of traffic building metrics. SEMM also integrates organic SEO, aspiring toward top SERP ranking without requiring PPC budget dollars.
Thus we can add SEMM, SMM and PPC to our SEM list, completing the basics for the ABCs of SEM and SEO. Let’s review what an SEM list might look like:
This list places us more than half way through the alphabet, and it’s just a list of the basics. There are great complexities with Insurance Agency SEO and Insurance Agency SEM, neither is likely to be mastered by the casual researcher nor an agent or producer aspiring to improve their technological web proficiency. Even well staffed marketing departments of small to midsize insurance agencies, perhaps in the $50 Million to $750 Million premium range ($5 Million to $75 Million in agency commissions), may entertain outsourcing these types of complex insurance agency marketing initiatives to an expert firm.
Posted on June 17th, 2011 by Alan Blume
Keyword density, simply stated, is the number of times a keyword appears on your web page divided by the number of total words on the page. For example, let’s say your keyword is insurance and it appears 5 times on a page that has 100 words. Your keyword density for insurance is 5%. The formula expressed here might look like this: K/TW*100 = Density where K is the keyword and TW is the total words on your web page, or in our example 5/100*100=5%. The formula is modified for long tail keywords by factoring in the number of keywords used in the long tail phrase.
Targeting keywords applicable to your prospect target market, doing so in a natural language syntax and focusing on a specific long tail keyword phrase (keywords of 3-5 words used in a phrase like California Business Insurance) for each page on your insurance agency website is advisable. Insurance agency SEO is in great part an exercise in mathematics, particularly for on page refinements. If your agency is seeking to improve your rankings, start with your on page efforts: Keyword effectiveness index (which keywords offer the best likelihood for improved search results), page title, meta tags, header tags and keyword density. Though there are still many other factors to consider, this is still a good start for agencies seeking to improve their organic search results. To determine your KEI (Keyword Effectiveness Index) you can use a free tool like Google AdWords, or purchase a more sophisticated solution.
For more information: http://www.startupselling.com/insurance-agency-marketing.html or http://startupselling.com/blogs/alanblume/category/insurance-agency-seo-2/
Posted on May 31st, 2011 by Alan Blume
It can be challenging for insurance agencies to determine where to turn for quality insurance agency marketing guidance. Purported experts are often lacking in one or many areas, and it can be challenging for agencies to separate high caliber marketing agencies from weak imitators. How does your insurance agency determine quality insurance agency marekting services from organizations which do not have the requisite expertise, even though they claim to have a well versed staff and have created a professional website? Here are a few tips to help guide you on your journey.
The message in this blog is simple, prior to selecting any skilled contractor, ensure they have the precise skills and background your insurance agency needs to create and complete effective insurance agency marketing plans.
Posted on May 23rd, 2011 by Alan Blume
Blogging is both an art and a science. With regards to the latter, we recommend at least two blogs per week, and if possible, multiple blogs per organization. The art of blogging revolves around the ability to offer relevant content of interest to your target audience. If it is a business blog, the entries don’t always have to be about insurance for example, other diverse topics can be of interest too. However, be wary of political topics which can often be polarizing. Blogging once a day, if you have something of value to share, can help in many ways including longtail keyword utilization, SEO rankings, refining keyword density, and as the basis for ePublishing. Of course I’d be remiss if I didn’t highlight the importance of Vlogs (Video Blogs). Video, podcasts, Skype recordings, and vlogs are becoming increasingly more important to insurance agent blogging. Video dramatically increases time spent on websites and can be uploaded to YouTube to improve web presence and as mentioned previously, insurance agency SEO. For more information about insurance agent blogging: http://startupselling.com/blogs/alanblume/5-simple-steps-to-start-an-insurance-agency-blog/ or for vlogging: http://startupselling.com/blogs/mikelauducci/a-blog-about-vlogs/. By the way, if you’re doing a quality job with your blogs – you should be able to answer a question by suggesting someone reads a detailed blog on that subject.
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